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masterofn001 , in US air force avoids PFAS water cleanup, citing supreme court’s Chevron ruling

If only there was someone. A commander of sorts. A chief type person, who could order them to do so.

If only there was such a position.

DeltaSMC ,

That’s what it says in the article.

“Moreover, one arm of the administration cannot sue another, so the military cannot sue the EPA, and the case would never end up in court where the Chevron decision would come into play, said Walter Mugdan, a former EPA Superfund director. Instead, it would be resolved internally by a presidential administration instead of the judiciary.”

undergroundoverground , in Racism Is Why Trump Is So Popular

Not just racism. His platform was racism AND a magical wall that pays for itself.

Kalysta , in Newsom threatens to take money from counties that don't reduce homelessness

Breaking up homeless encampments doesn’t fix the fact that these people have nowhere to live! What a cruel policy.

Why not emminent domain overpriced apartment buildings owned by the Saudis, Chinese, and Russians, and give the apartments away the homeless. Problem solved.

BaroqueInMind ,

Yeah, so simple!

Those apartments world devolve into a human trafficking, crime ridden drug overdose havens in no time. Mental health support for them is needed first.

ImADifferentBird ,
@ImADifferentBird@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

You get them in a stable living arrangement first, and then that makes mental health support exponentially easier.

Housing first policies work everywhere they’re tried.

BaroqueInMind ,

Please link the studies to change my mind. Otherwise, apologies for sounding rude, but you are full of bullshit lies.

ImADifferentBird ,
@ImADifferentBird@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

I’d appreciate if you didn’t insult me for your own ignorance.

As for studies, you could start here: www.huduser.gov/portal/…/highlight2.html

BaroqueInMind ,

Fuck yes. Thank you for this link.

lets_get_off_lemmy ,

Lol you don’t get to be rude if you apologize first.

BaroqueInMind ,

Yes I can; it’s called hypocrisy.

ByteOnBikes ,

I never understood people like you. That the moment you help someone, the result will obviously be the worst outcome? So better not help them at all?

BaroqueInMind ,

You don’t understand because your never consider the consequences of your actions.

Providing shelter for everyone is a basic human need.

But forcing mentally ill people mixed together with financially downtrodden unhoused people into a Kowloon City type environment without considering their ability to maintain their cleanliness and safety without imposing jack-booted level of policing is another level of stupid I can’t force out of you without an hours long face-to-face lecture where you and I can discuss like two friendly normal people.

LifeInMultipleChoice ,

I would say the pilgrams ended up alright but here we are.

DarkNightoftheSoul ,
@DarkNightoftheSoul@mander.xyz avatar

“force your opinion out of you over an hours long conversation like a normal friendly person”

time for some self reflection there, baroque

i happen to agree with you too, as would i think anyone who has spent time in an american projects or shelter system, but youve so thoroughly poisoned the argument i cant take it up here.

CileTheSane ,
@CileTheSane@lemmy.ca avatar

Providing shelter for everyone is a basic human need.

I agree. So let’s start with the basic human need. Nobody suggested we stop there and wash our hands of it saying “problem solved.”

Maeve ,

Why not both, simultaneously?

givesomefucks , in Scientology is on the brink of killing an entire medical industry

I mean. Comparing modern ECTs to the shit from the 60s is like saying a doctor testing knee reflexes with the little hammer is the same as taking a sledgehammer to a kneecap…

MagicShel , (edited ) in Scientology is on the brink of killing an entire medical industry

Not sure what to think about this. I hate Scientology, but I’m pretty iffy on ECT. My grandma had those treatments for years and it seemed to treat her anxiety by destroying her memory. I looked it up and treating anxiety with it is “controversial.”

That doesn’t make me an expert in it and maybe there are folks it does wonderful things for, but at least in her case they probably should’ve just loaded her up with Xanax. Not that that is a wonderful option either, but that was really all she wanted and I think she put up with the ECT to try to convince them she needed it.

So Scientology can get bent but I’ll allow for the possibility that maybe the stopped clock could be right here. Or maybe you folks have all seen it work much better than I have.

Edit: I should make clear - science should be challenged by researchers, not Scientologists. That’s how science works - withstand falsification. If this causes any non-idiots to look at the data and reaffirm the treatment, I’m for that. As stated, Scientology itself can get fucked and die in a fire.

rtxn ,

The problem is that this would remove ECT even as a desperate final option for treatment.

GetOffMyLan ,

Tbh honest mate the most likely thing is that’s a coincidence.

It’s used all the time for people who can’t take drugs i.e. pregnant people. And has been shown to be very safe.

MagicShel ,

100%. I am self-aware here. I’m not a professional, I just was in frequent contact with her during that part of her life. She was in one of those independent living places after my grandfather died, but still had her wits. This wasn’t end of life care. We could carry on long conversations about all kinds of things, past and present. If you’re implying it was dementia or Alzheimer’s, she never was diagnosed with either and lived another 15 years or so.

I know, anecdotes aren’t data. I trust the medical profession as a whole. But there have been a lot of reproducibility issues with studies that have come out, particularly in the area of mental health. And between that and my experience I’m okay with taking another look at the data. But if researchers and clinicians are satisfied, I won’t gainsay that.

protist ,

There are possible side effects though, like any medical treatment, so the potential risks do need to be weighed against the potential benefits, again like any medical treatment. I’ve seen ECT work wonders for certain conditions though

Cosmonauticus ,

Unless you have a medical license or a PhD what you typed holds absolutely zero weight. It’s the equivalent of saying all surgery is bad because a surgeon left a sponge inside my grandma

underwire212 ,

It’s anecdotal. There are mountains of data and studies now. Still amazes me that people still argue “Oh, well X is bad because I know 1 person who had a bad experience”

MagicShel ,

I’m definitely not saying it’s bad. There are tons of possible reasons to explain my experience besides ECT bad.

underwire212 ,

“I’m pretty iffy on ECT”

“Doctors should’ve loaded her up with pills instead of ECT in her case”

Sounds like you don’t see the merits in ECT, which is perfectly fine. I just disagree with your methods of reasoning used to support this conclusion.

MagicShel ,

I think I was petty clear it’s an anecdote. There’s not very much to discuss here other than us nodding our heads in agreement that Scientology is bad. This is a discussion board. I discussed.

loics2 ,

We’re on Lemmy, not a scientific publication… Nothing typed on here holds any weight

protist ,

ECT is not a treatment for anxiety, unfortunately. I’ve seen it work wonders for severe depression, mania, and catatonia, but never for anxiety.

Sometimes I’ve seen ECT being used as a “last resort” treatment for people with issues that can only be treated with psychotherapy, like PTSD or borderline personality disorder, but who have been unwilling or unable to do the work over the course of years and the doctors are lost on where to go next. In these cases ECT is almost universally a failure and the side effects are not worth it.

For someone in a manic episode or who’s experiencing catatonia, some memory loss is a small trade to have your life back.

MagicShel ,

It is, or at least was, a controversial treatment for anxiety. And my grandma was drug seeking. She just wanted to be bombed out of her mind on Xanax, so I can even see looking for other treatment options out of desperation because nothing worked the way she wanted and they wouldn’t give her enough Xanax.

I get it. It was just hard to watch her after her treatments. At first the memories came back, but eventually they didn’t.

But that’s just my experience. I’m not going to argue with medical science because even if future science shows mistakes were made, it’s not like I have the knowledge or experience to do better. But science grows by being challenged and proving itself or being proven wrong. I’m okay with it being challenged by actual professionals - not by Scientologists.

protist ,

Lots of medical treatments are improperly applied due to a physician’s poor clinical judgment, and it sounds like that’s what happened in this case. Sorry this happened to your grandma

Spitzspot , in Scientology is on the brink of killing an entire medical industry
@Spitzspot@lemmings.world avatar

Where is Shelly?

dactylotheca ,
@dactylotheca@suppo.fi avatar

I bet David had her killed years ago. They own the cops so nothing ever comes of the investigations

midnight_puker ,
@midnight_puker@sh.itjust.works avatar

Aaron Levin Smith made a video on Shelleys whereabouts somewhat recently. IIRC she’s in a compound in California somewhere and she’s fine, by all outward appearances. I’m pretty sure she’s drinking the kool ade like the rest of them.

FlyingSquid ,
@FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

Appearances can be deceiving. They wouldn’t be hiding her in a compound for years and not responding to inquiries if everything was good between her and the CoS.

midnight_puker ,
@midnight_puker@sh.itjust.works avatar

From what I understand, she doesn’t seem to be held against her will. If Aaron Levin Smith is to be believed (being that he is a former Sea Org member, I’d say his credibility is good), she’s been seen out and about running errands and the like, but always with a security detail. There’s a decent chance that I’m misremembering something, though, so take this with a pinch of salt.

VirtualOdour ,

Yeah people are desperate to believe horror stories especially involving a woman but the reality is very likely she’s just a member of the cult living a relaxed and affluent life on the money they swindle.

ImADifferentBird ,
@ImADifferentBird@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

How many bets that “security detail” is as much to prevent her escape as it is to prevent anyone else from harming her?

dactylotheca , (edited )
@dactylotheca@suppo.fi avatar

Huh, interesting. Probably not “fine” though since if she’s at Gold / Int Base she’s probably being held against her will, considering that the whole base is sorta built around being like a prison compound and they even have private security “pursuit teams” to hunt down escapees.

Edit: not to say that everybody at Int is being held against their will, but it’s where eg. The Hole is so if somebody is being held, Int is probably where they’d be

01189998819991197253 ,
@01189998819991197253@infosec.pub avatar

From the linked wiki:

According to some former members of Scientology, conditions within Gold Base are harsh, with staff members receiving sporadic paychecks of $50 at most, working seven days a week, and being subjected to punishments for failing to meet work quotas.[2] Media reports have stated that around 100 people a year try to escape from the base but most are soon retrieved by “pursuit teams”. Despite many accounts of mistreatment from ex-members, law enforcement investigations and lawsuits against Scientology have been thwarted by the First Amendment’s guarantee of religious freedom and the church’s ability to rely on “ministerial exemptions” in employment law. Scientology denies any mistreatment and calls the base “the ideal setting for professional and spiritual growth”.

corroded , in Locking up items to deter shoplifting is pushing shoppers online

The real problem is when there’s no employees available to open the cabinet. I’m sorry, Home Depot, but I’m not going to run around the store trying to find someone only to have them call someone else just so I can get a $50 roll of copper wire.

Speculater ,
@Speculater@lemmy.world avatar

Not to mention that in some locations there’s so few employees, you’ll end up walking a mile before someone says, “I’ll have someone meet you there.” Then no one shows up.

ByteOnBikes ,

I went to Seattle for a tech conference. The supermarkets are crazy depressing. There was like 5 staff members, a Spanish lady with a cast on her leg, two kids under 20, a really big guy at the bakery isle, and a 25 yo woman who was stocking and managing a cash register.

There was also a bunch of weirdos outside and not a security guard in sight.

Then a mile or two away are million dollar housesn and billion dollar tech companies.

FlyingSquid ,
@FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

Especially in huge stores like Home Depot. Good luck finding anyone within 50 yards.

lennybird ,
@lennybird@lemmy.world avatar

Except when they accost you to do that stupid fucking survey and just dive right in without your consent. Boy, they find you then… When deciding between Lowe’s and Home Depot, I lean toward going to Lowe’s simply because of that bullshit.

FlyingSquid ,
@FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

My daughter loves Five Below. Last time I went there, they forced me to rate my shopping experience between 1 and 10 in order to finish checking out. I did 5 because fuck their statistics.

corroded ,

The third-party sales people trying to scam you into a new AC are the best. My go-to is “Sorry, you’d have to ask my landlord.” I haven’t had a landlord in years.

Trainguyrom ,

Once at a store the person wearing a DirectTV shirt said “what do you use for TV service?” I just said “we have lots of DVDs we don’t watch” he didn’t even try to continue the sales pitch

Trainguyrom ,

Seeing the nonsense Lowes and Home Depot pulls makes me happy to live within Menard’s territory. Similar prices and stock but less corporate BS

zipzoopaboop ,

Canadian Tire are the champions of this

ShepherdPie ,

I just had to do this at lowes for a measily 15ft of Romex and again for a breaker.

corroded ,

It’s ridiculous. I had the same issue for a 50ft roll of 14 gauge romex. Not even the good 10/3 stuff. This was bottom-of-the-barrel 14/2. I was then able to walk over and grab a $100 cable tester and a box of CAT6 right off the shelf.

I guess crackheads aren’t stealing cable testers or ethernet cable.

Zahille7 ,

What’s Romex? I have no idea what this conversation is about but I’d love to know lol

skyspydude1 ,

“Romex” is a brand name for a type of non-metallic (NM) insulated wire. It’s pretty much the standard for 95% of the wire that’s run in a typical house in North America, and kind of looks like a big flat extension cable. There’s an external plastic sheath that holds all the wires together (that’s the non-metallic part, as opposed to say, running it in metal conduit), and then each wire inside is also insulated, aside from the ground conductor. When you see something like 12/2 or 10/3, that’s the wire gauge (12 or 10 gauge) and then the number of current carrying conductors on the inside (2 or 3, plus a ground).

_bcron ,

Romex is that whitish electrical cable you sometimes see in unfinished basements, goes from the breaker box to junction boxes. White cable, nailed to the studs with that white plastic tab with a nail on each side, goes to a blue or metal box with outlets in it.

The copper in that is pretty thick so nowadays a lot of places lock up the wires so people don’t try to make off with a bunch of it

corroded ,

I’m not a professional electrician, but I believe the color of the cable is standardized, too. The white cable you refer to is 14-gauge, which is standard for a 15-amp household outlet. 12-gauge is yellow, and 10-gauge is orange.

I’m happy to be corrected if I’m wrong, though.

ColeSloth ,

I wanted a $4.88 cent license plate bulb from wal mart. It took me 25 minutes.

RagingRobot ,

And they always look so put out by the request too. Like they don’t want to help but do it begrudgingly. Who wants to go through all that

gnomesaiyan , in Locking up items to deter shoplifting is pushing shoppers online
@gnomesaiyan@lemmy.world avatar

My only real issue is with health and beauty being locked up. I’m currently transitioning (MtF) and have found myself buying a lot online for this very reason. If it’s behind a glass wall, it can stay there.

FlyingSquid ,
@FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

I never really thought about how that sort of thing would make things harder for trans people and I’m very sorry that’s yet another hurdle you and others have to jump through just to be yourselves.

jadedwench ,

That sucks. Some locations everything is locked up, other ones are better. I usually stick to the “nice” mall or go to a standalone store instead. Just in case you didn’t know, places like Sephora and Ulta allow you to return whatever. If you hate it or it bothers your skin, just return it. They will also give you samples, for some things at least, to take home if you ask. Such as foundation or something. They have these little tiny generic containers they can fill. Target used to be pretty good for skincare, but I haven’t been in one for a long time.

TransplantedSconie , in With over 577,000 signatures verified, Arizona will put abortion rights on the ballot

They better not vote republican or it won’t matter.

If Trump wins it’s a nationwide ban, as well as a dictatorship

verdantbanana , (edited )
@verdantbanana@lemmy.world avatar

deleted_by_moderator

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  • OhStopYellingAtMe ,
    @OhStopYellingAtMe@lemmy.world avatar

    By a Supreme Court decision. A decision that was only possible after trump was able to choose three conservative justices.

    Biden isn’t on the Supreme Court. He has no hand in the fall of Roe vs. Wade

    verdantbanana ,
    @verdantbanana@lemmy.world avatar

    deleted_by_moderator

  • Loading...
  • FlyingSquid ,
    @FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

    Please tell us which of the following people Joe Biden put on the Supreme Court in the four years he’s been president:

    Clarence Thomas
    John Roberts
    Samuel Alito
    Neil Gorsuch
    Brett Cavanaugh
    Amy Coney Barrett

    How many of those did he put on the court during his presidency? It must have been a lot of them for it to be his fault Roe was struck down.

    verdantbanana ,
    @verdantbanana@lemmy.world avatar

    During Clarence Thomas’s nomination hearings in 1991, Biden’s questions on constitutional issues were often convoluted to the point that Thomas sometimes lost track of them,[115] and Thomas later wrote that Biden’s questions were akin to “beanballs”.[116] After the committee hearing closed, the public learned that Anita Hill, a University of Oklahoma law school professor, had accused Thomas of making unwelcome sexual comments when they had worked together.[117][118] Biden had known of some of these charges, but initially shared them only with the committee because Hill was then unwilling to testify.[16] The committee hearing was reopened and Hill testified, but Biden did not permit testimony from other witnesses, such as a woman who had made similar charges and experts on harassment.[119] The full Senate confirmed Thomas by a 52–48 vote, with Biden opposed.[16] Liberal legal advocates and women’s groups felt strongly that Biden had mishandled the hearings and not done enough to support Hill.[119] In 2019, he told Hill he regretted his treatment of her, but Hill said afterward she remained unsatisfied.[120]

    During his early years in the Senate, Biden focused on consumer protection and environmental issues and called for greater government accountability.[82] In a 1974 interview, he described himself as liberal on civil rights and liberties, senior citizens’ concerns and healthcare, but conservative on other issues, including abortion and military conscription.[83]

    Biden is the same now as he has always been

    when has he ever tried to defend women’s rights

    FlyingSquid ,
    @FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

    You don’t seem to be very familiar with how the U.S. government works, so I will have to educate you:

    1. The president nominates the justice.
    2. One senator alone is not responsible for approving that nomination.
    3. Clarence Thomas alone couldn’t strike down Roe.

    I know you really want to blame Biden for this, but maybe do it after taking a basic civics course.

    verdantbanana ,
    @verdantbanana@lemmy.world avatar

    misunderstood

    blaming Biden for being a lame duck politician for half a century who did not do anything to advance progress

    FlyingSquid ,
    @FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

    See, the problem with you claiming you aren’t blaming Biden for the end of Roe v. Wade is that you literally blamed him for ending it just a few comments above.

    verdantbanana ,
    @verdantbanana@lemmy.world avatar

    deleted_by_moderator

  • Loading...
  • FlyingSquid ,
    @FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

    The Roe v. Wade decision happened the same year Biden was elected to the senate.

    So based on your own argument, he was also responsible for abortion being legal for 50 years.

    verdantbanana ,
    @verdantbanana@lemmy.world avatar

    was on shaky ground for fifty years because it was never put into law or properly defended

    Democrats never got a true hard on for codifying Roe v. Wade

    just say whatever it takes to get donations and votes

    FlyingSquid ,
    @FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

    That wasn’t a response to what I said.

    Based on your logic, Joe Biden is personally responsible for abortion being legalized in the United States.

    I’m sorry you don’t like your own logic.

    xmunk ,

    What a deeply disingenuous claim to make. You must write the headlines for NewsMax and the NatPo - gotta spin that spin until we fall over dizzy.

    Spitzspot ,
    @Spitzspot@lemmings.world avatar
    Commiunism , in SpaceX accused of dumping mercury into Texas waters for years

    I remember this article from a couple days ago where some chess player poisoned their opponent’s board with mercury, and I’d like to believe they copied this strategy from Musk’s SpaceX. He is truly a visionary and innovator, inspiring chess players to discover new strategies.

    Kolanaki , in Locking up items to deter shoplifting is pushing shoppers online
    @Kolanaki@yiffit.net avatar

    I just bought my own key for those cabinets because even if I order something from my local Walmart for delivery or pickup that is in one of these, they will say it’s sold out even if they have a full shelf of shit.

    TrickDacy ,
    @TrickDacy@lemmy.world avatar

    You’re claiming they all use the exact same key and also no one sees you on a security camera and kicks you out…? Also they just refuse to sell you things they have but lie about…?

    PriorityMotif ,
    @PriorityMotif@lemmy.world avatar

    They’re shitty wafer locks, you can rake them open in 2 seconds with a random key.

    TrickDacy ,
    @TrickDacy@lemmy.world avatar

    Lol, so “security through no-one-would-expect-this-stupidity”

    PriorityMotif ,
    @PriorityMotif@lemmy.world avatar

    I think you could get an additional charge for having “lockpicking” tools in some states, so instead of a minor shoplifting charge, it could get enhanced to a felony.

    AA5B ,

    I always heard it proved intent. Lock picks are not illegal, but if you bring them to a robbery you’ve clearly planned ahead

    Kolanaki ,
    @Kolanaki@yiffit.net avatar

    You ever work at Walmart? Nobody actively monitors the cameras and the cabinets all use a T-shaped barrel key. Usually only a single employee carries the keys and with the time constraints set by OGP (the team that fills pickup and delivery orders), nobody wants to waste time looking for that person.

    TrickDacy ,
    @TrickDacy@lemmy.world avatar

    Never worked retail. All this is surprising to me, especially that they’re consistently refusing to sell you in-stock items

    cm0002 ,

    Having worked in a closely related industry, fast food, none of this is surprising.

    When I worked FF I definitely told people the Ice Cream/Shake machine was broken/off/down for cleaning all the time when it was busy because I couldn’t be bothered to deal with it (it’s annoying AF to make shakes and it ALWAYS broke your workflow when you were getting to a good speed)

    I’ve also told people we were out of something just because it required me to go to the back because we ran out of what was stocked in front

    So yea, if I worked retail and I had to find someone with a key to fulfill a pickup order and I had the ability to simply mark it as out of stock…yea I think you know what action I’d take.

    That’s what happens when they pay you the bare minimum. Minimum pay, minimum effort.

    TrickDacy ,
    @TrickDacy@lemmy.world avatar

    You just validated so many suspicions that I’ve had.

    SendMePhotos ,

    That is what you call a shit worker. I’ve worked retail and service and was did go in the back when I said I would. I would go dig for the stupid $2 item because customer satisfaction.

    IphtashuFitz ,

    Half of those “cameras” are likely fake…

    Poppenlockenheimmer ,

    Allow me to introduce you to the wild world of common keys: This Key is Your Key, This Key is My Key

    TrickDacy ,
    @TrickDacy@lemmy.world avatar

    Wowww. very interesting/insane watch. Thanks for that!

    brygphilomena ,

    Always a good watch. Deviants got a lot of good videos.

    MediaBiasFactChecker Bot , in Puerto Rico cancels classes, activates National Guard as Tropical Storm Ernesto approaches

    Seattle Times - News Source Context (Click to view Full Report)Information for Seattle Times:
    > MBFC: Left-Center - Credibility: High - Factual Reporting: High - United States of America
    > Wikipedia about this source

    Search topics on Ground.Newshttps://www.seattletimes.com/nation-world/nation/puerto-rico-cancels-classes-activates-national-guard-as-tropical-storm-ernesto-approaches/

    Media Bias Fact Check | bot support

    teejay ,

    Jesus Christ this bot is annoying.

    Beacon , in Locking up items to deter shoplifting is pushing shoppers online

    Whoda thunk it?! And it's especially dumb because iirc studies have shown that shoplifting rates haven't changed much if at all in a long time

    MediaBiasFactChecker Bot , in With over 577,000 signatures verified, Arizona will put abortion rights on the ballot

    Seattle Times - News Source Context (Click to view Full Report)Information for Seattle Times:
    > MBFC: Left-Center - Credibility: High - Factual Reporting: High - United States of America
    > Wikipedia about this source

    Search topics on Ground.Newshttps://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/health/with-over-577000-signatures-verified-arizona-will-put-abortion-rights-on-the-ballot/

    Media Bias Fact Check | bot support

    cantw8togo , in US air force avoids PFAS water cleanup, citing supreme court’s Chevron ruling

    Sounds like the dog caught the car again.

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